Thursday, May 7

Reading at Antigone Books!

OTHER VOICES WOMEN'S READING SERIES

Friday, May 8, 2009, 7 p.m.
Antigone Book store, 411 North 4th Avenue, 792-3715 or lizaporter@aol.com, 891-9707
Featured readers: Maryrose Larkin and Arpine Konyalian Grenier
Open microphone.
Maryrose Larkin lives in Portland, where she works as a freelance researcher. She is the author of Inverse (nine muses books), Whimsy Daybook 2007 (FLASH+CARD), and The Book of Ocean (i.e. press). Maryrose is one of the organizers of Spare Room, and is co-editor, with Sarah Mangold, of FLASH+CARD, a chapbook and ephemera poetry press. She is currently working on a manuscript called Frost Broken Up, and a neo-benshi based on Dreyer's The Passion of Joan of Arc.
 Arpine Konyalian Grenier’s work has been described as a mosaic of narrative that takes
us out of our provincial concentration on American life to encompass broader social and
geopolitical issues with a decidedly urban and postmodern sensibility. Arpine is a former scientist,
musician and financial analyst. Her work and translations have appeared in numerous publications
including several anthologies. Recently, she was guest editor for the poetry journal, Big Bridge, and
in May she’ll be reading from her poetry as well as presenting a paper titled, Heritage Like Money Then:
Exaptation at the Margins (Where the Word Meets Itself)
at Sabanci University's Dink Memorial
Conference in Istanbul, Turkey. The recipient of a Pima Arts Council Award, and author of three collections
of poetry, Arpine lives in Tucson, Arizona.

Wednesday, March 11

Reading in DC and In New York

Hello Friends, please pass on to anyone who might be interested.

New York--Sunday, March 15, 6:30 PM
Maryrose Larkin/James Belflower/Natalie Knight
@ Zinc Bar, 82 West 3rd Street (btw Thompson & Sullivan)

Washington DC--Sunday, March 22, 7:00 pm
Mark Cunningham, Anne Gorrick, and Maryrose Larkin
@ Bridge Street Books, next to the Four Seasons in Georgetown, at the
end of M street

Hope to see you there.

Tuesday, January 27

30 30s

I finally have 30 late winter 30s. I'm sure 10 of them aren't very good, but still 30 30s!

Friday, January 16

Spare Room 100!

Spare Room's 100th Reading

The Spare Room reading series celebrates seven years of presenting experimental writing in Portland with a marathon hundredth reading

Spare Room organizers past and present (with friends) will read

100 Poems by 100 Poets from the Past 100 Years


Sunday, January 25

starting at 2:00 pm
ending when we finish (6:00? 7:00?)

Free admission

Gallery Homeland
(at the Ford Building)

2505 SE 11th Avenue
www.galleryhomeland.org

www.flim.com/spareroom

======================

> From Helen Adam to Louis Zukofsky, from Futurism to Personism, from Hiroshima to Blackhawk Island, from a Polish count to a Peruvian communist, from Dada to MoMA, from prisoners of war to secret agents, from mimeographers to bloggers . . . come hear a small but representative slice of the extraordinary range of poetries practiced in the past century!

Readers will include:

David Abel
Meredith Blankinship
Joseph Bradshaw
Alicia Cohen
Gale Czerski
Laura Feldman
Patrick Hartigan
Lindsay Hill
Rodney Koeneke
Maryrose Larkin
Sam Lohmann
Jesse Morse
Mark Owens & crew*
Chris Piuma
Dan Raphael
James Yeary

* sound poetry performers:
Leo & Anna Daedalus
Tony Christy
Linda Austin
Lisa Radon with
Neville, Molly, & Oskar

and more . . .


Reading poems by:

Helen Adam
Charles Amirkhanian
Guillaume Apollinaire
Hugo Ball
Ted Berrigan
Mei-mei Berssenbrugge
Robin Blaser
Nicole Brossard
Basil Bunting
Anne Carson
Constantine Cavafy
Joseph Ceravolo
Theresa Hak Kyung Cha
Inger Christiansen
Robert Creeley
Beverly Dahlen
Robert Desnos
H.D.
Francois Dufrene
Robert Duncan
Russell Edson
Jennifer Crystal Fang-Chien
Kevin Goodan
Linda Gregg
Bill Griffiths
Barbara Guest
Carla Harryman
Dick Higgins
Ake Hodell
Fanny Howe
Susan Howe
Philip Jenks
Karen Kelley
Aleksei Kruchenyk
Gerrit Lansing
Jackson Mac Low
Bernadette Mayer
Marianne Moore
Christian Morgenstern
Harryette Mullen
Susan Smith Nash
bp nichol
Lorine Niedecker
Alice Notley
Frank O'Hara
George Oppen
Michael Palmer
Bob Perelman
Dennis Phillips
Laura Riding
Joan Retallack
Gerhard Rühm
Diana Saenz
Frank Samperi
Aram Saroyan
Kurt Schwitters
David Shapiro
Charles Sharpe
Ron Silliman
Gustaf Sobin
Jack Spicer
Gertrude Stein
Wallace Stevens
Rhett Stuart
Cole Swenson
John Taggart
Nathaniel Tarn
Alberta Turner
César Vallejo
Lew Welch
Hannah Weiner
Jonathan Williams
William Carlos Williams
C.D. Wright
Araki Yasusada
Louis Zukofsky

and many more!

Thursday, January 8

Endi's a really terrific poet! You should come

Endi Bogue Hartigan & Maryrose Larkin



Sunday, January 11
7:30 pm

Concordia Coffee House
2909 NE Alberta

$5.00 suggested donation


Endi Bogue Hartigan will be reading from her first book, One Sun Storm, and from a new manuscript. One Sun Storm was selected for the 2008 Colorado Prize for Poetry by Martha Ronk, and was released in November from the Center for Literary Publishing. Her work has recently appeared or is forthcoming in Chicago Review, Free Verse, TinFish, Gulf Coast, Pleiades, and Quarterly West. Endi edited and cofounded, with her husband poet Patrick Hartigan, Spectaculum, a magazine that was devoted to long poems, series, and projects best presented at length. She lives in Portland, with Patrick and their son Jackson.


Maryrose Larkin lives in Portland, where she works as a freelance researcher. She is the author of Inverse (nine muses books), Whimsy Daybook 2007 (FLASH+CARD), and The Book of Ocean (i.e. press). Her work can also be found in FO A RM, Insurance, Bird Dog, Columbia Poetry Review, and Washington Review. Maryrose is one of the organizers of Spare Room, and is coeditor, with Sarah Mangold, of FLASH+CARD, a chapbook and ephemera poetry press.



Chorus of blue [Crater Lake, 2007]

The question of change
is a question of what we can afford to continue.
A series of snapping points or rips.
The lake is a question
of what the mountain can take or not.
The chorus afforded blue but barely.
The chorus of blue sang out of thin voices in oxygen-thin air.
The blue vibrated electrons in water and absorbed
what was not turned back.
We turned our backs on the war.
The chorus of blue tilted our eyes, and filterering, taught us to filter,
but out what?
The chorus of blue held itself up, a mirror of itself, fanatic and fantastic.
Abstract blue--a new coin--took the center
through, through.
We turned our backs on the lake.
A series of snapping points or rips.
The chorus filtered out disturbance, filtered out detail and violence
and observance.
Tilt, shine, tilt. . . .
what did we shed again, and why?
A little girl went back sobbing
who had to leave the clearest sky.

Endi Bogue Hartigan



from Inverse

Roots open rise and run

his face compare to string notation

logic
required and where

but this cannot and without it
box step the sun and box step the moon

Maryrose Larkin

Thursday, December 25

Reading

Since I'm not writing, I'm reading (or re reading)

The Red Gaze--Barbara Guest
Imitation Poems--Patrick Durgin
on melody dispatch--Corrine Fitzpatrick
Daddy Clean Head--Christine Stewart
Kyotologic--Anne Gorrick

I hope to be writing again soon.

Tuesday, September 30

New York Next Week

Hello I'm reading two places in New York next week

First

18th Annual Subterranean Poetry Reading

Saturday, October 4, 2008 at 2pm

with: JJ Blickstein, Steve Cotten, Teresa Genovese, Steve Hirsch, Geof Huth, Maryrose Larkin, Susan McKechnie, Wayne Montecalvo, George Quasha, Alana Siegel, Lorna Smedman, Charles Stein, Carl Welden, and R. Dionysius Whiteurs

The Widow Jane Mine
Century House Historical Society
Route 213
Rosendale, NY 12472

A $5 donation is suggested to benefit Century House

For directions, visit the Century House website at: http://centuryhouse.org/


And

A house reading in Manhattan, and you can email me at maryrose_at_gmail.com for details.

Tuesday, September 16

Barnes and Noble Reading

Barnes & Noble Reading Series is delighted to present poets Dale Favier, Dan Raphael, and Maryrose Larkin.

When: September 17, 7:00 p.m.

Where:

Barnes & Noble

1317 Lloyd Center // Gift section

Portland, OR 97232

503-249-0800

Hosted by: Tom Mattox



Dale Favier
has taught poetry, chopped vegetables, and written software for a living. Currently he works half-time as a massage therapist and half-time as a database administrator for a non-profit. He is a Buddhist, in the Tibetan tradition; he lives with his wife and two nearly grown children in Portland, Oregon. He never wrote much poetry until he began blogging a few years ago, at Molehttp://koshtra.blogspot.com – and fell in with bad companions, with whom he eventually brought out an anthology, Brilliant Coroners. He has an M.Phil. in Medieval English Literature from Yale, and his most recent work has been translations of Old English alliterative verse.

Dan Raphael: All that matters about dan raphael is the poetry, which he performs in places like Wordstock, Bumbershoot, Burning Word, Mountain Writers, Portland Jazz Festival and KBOO. His most recent books are Breath Test and Showing Light a Good Time; he's currently working on his new manuscript City Rain Coincidence. Current poems appear in Stringtown, Otoliths, Knock Journal, Skidrow Penthouse and Refined Savage.


Maryrose Larkin
lives in Portland, Oregon, where she works as a freelance researcher. She is the author of Inverse (nine muses books), Whimsy Daybook 2007 FLASH+CARD), and The Book of Ocean (i.e. press). Maryrose is part of Spare Room, a group of people who organize readings and other events in Portland. She is co-editor, with Sarah Mangold, of FLASH+CARD, a chapbook and ephemera poetry press.

Sunday, September 14

Anne Gorrick's Kyotologic



I've been friends with Anne Gorrick for almost 25 years, and I don't think there is anyone who has had more influence on my writing. Her book, Kyotologic, has been published by Shearsman and available through SPD

Monday, June 23

Judy Roitman's No Face and Catherine Daly's Vauxhall




I'm very much not thinking about blogging, poetry or poetics right now but I wanted to share that my dear friend and compatriot Judy Roitman's No Face is available from SPD. I've seen most of the book in manuscript and it is wonderful.

AND, Catherine Daly's Vauxhall just came out from Shearsman!



Buy these books. I dare you.

Wednesday, April 30

The New Talkies

Hello--

If anyone is still reading, I'm in the NEW TALKIES neo benshi extravaganza on Saturday. Please come

Sunday, February 17

Insane

As a personal aside, my new job is keeping me very busy, and I hope to return to blogging bach in March.

Meanwhile, read this interesting essay about a recent poetry event in Portland by my friend Chris here

Tuesday, January 29

notes on blogging bach

I've started a new job and I'm very tired, so blogging bach will be erratic.

Part of the problem of free writing, or writing through something is that what appears on the blog is fodder for what comes later, but mostly it feels like the work I would write if I were a lazy poet. Or a poet without interests.

I wanted to see what would happen to writing through when it was observed.

Tuesday, January 1

Some commitments this year

1. Finish the Late Winter 30s
2. Publish more other people's chapbooks.
3. Blogging Bach (January/February)
4. Neo-Benshi project. I was thinking of using Joan of Arc, but now I'm thinking of using Lain: Serial Experiments. And the language master.

Wednesday, December 5

Monday, October 15

A really wonderful Book of Ocean Review


From Mark Wallace

I'm really pleased about his attention to the coherence edge. One of my major concerns is how far can you push words, a line, or an idea and have both cohere and teeter into incoherence.